Opening

We are hearing more and more about the student debt “crisis” facing college graduates. Ask students to share what they’ve heard about the crisis.

A quick look at the numbers helps explain why so many politicians, economists, and think tanks see student debt as a critical issue not just for students, but for the larger economy. Share some of the statistics with students:

Among the students graduating college in 2018, 69 percent took out loans to pay tuition.

The average debt upon graduating was almost $30,000.

14 percent of graduates’ parents took out additional loans to pay for college.

45 million people in the U.S. owe money for student loans.

Altogether, Americans owe over $1.5 trillion in student debt.

11.5 percent of student loans are delinquent or in default.

88 percent of 2017 graduates from for-profit colleges owed money, and the average amount was almost $40,000.

Almost half of graduates from for-profit colleges default on their loans within 12 years.

Over 600,000 people owe $200,000 or more in student loans

3.2 million people who are age 60 or over still owe money on their loans

Tuition, room, and board expenses have doubled since 1971 (even accounting for inflation)

Quiz

1. Until around 1970, the Universities of California, Florida and New York City were tuition- free.

2. In 1965, the average tuition at public colleges and universities was how much?

$4

$243

$1144

$5400

3. From 2005 to 2016, student debt increased:

350 percent

50 percent

29 percent

112 percent

-4 percent

4. Federal student loans amounted to $10 billion in 1987. What were they in 2018?

$200 billion

$1.5 billion

$10.5 billion

$775 million

$1200 billion

5. From 2008 to 2017, state funding for colleges in the U.S.:

Tripled

Increased by 45 percent

Decreased by $9 billion

Remained the same.

Answers: 1. T 2. (B) 3. (A) 4. (E) 5. (C)

Next, ask students to read the following summary of the student debt crisis, and proposed solutions to it, including from 2020 presidential contenders. Click here for a pdf version of the reading. (Click here for a pdf version of the reading.)

Reading:
The Student Debt Problem – and Some Possible Solutions

On May 2, 2019, the New York Times reported on a Temple University survey of students in 100 colleges. The survey that found 45 percent of students had faced food insecurity in the past month. One student said she’d had to take out a $5000 loan in her senior year. She was working two jobs, living in a homeless shelter, and budgeting fifteen dollars a week for food. Another had to move back home and use a food-sharing app to get by.

An NPR report on student debt noted different ways college students cope with homelessness—including “couch surfing” (moving from friend to friend) and sleeping in empty campus buildings. A CBS News story discussed students sleeping in cars, parks, and forests.

As the crisis gained public recognition and discussion, both government agencies and private organizations launched new efforts to help students in particular schools and districts attend college. Many of these programs restrict eligibility by need, merit, and locale. For instance:

In 2014, the city of Chicago created a scholarship program which made its community colleges free to Chicago Public Schools graduates (with a 3.0 grade point average).

Tennessee began offering free tuition to 2-year community colleges and technical schools.

Other states that have instituted some sort of tuition-free initiative include New York, Louisiana, and Rhode Island.

In 2015, President Obama noted the Tennessee and Chicago programs in his State of the Union Address and proposed a federal effort to assist states in making 2-year colleges free. Meanwhile hundreds of college “Promise” programs, funded by private donors, have sprung up to provide free college to students living in particular towns and cities. (For a database of all Promise programs, see https://www.ahead-penn.org/creating-knowledge/college-promise).

In 2016, a major contender for the presidency of the United States made the cost of college a major issue. Senator Bernie Sanders proposed a plan that would make all public colleges tuition-free. The Democratic candidates—Sanders, Hillary Clinton, and Martin O’Malley—all offered ideas to ease the burden of debt for graduates. After Clinton won the nomination, she adopted some of Bernie Sanders’ plan, proposing to eliminate tuition (for public colleges) for families with incomes under $85,000.

After the election of President Trump, the momentum toward college affordability slowed, as the new administration has not made student debt or tuition a priority.

Proposals from 2020 Candidates

Now that the 2020 presidential campaign has begun, the Sanders proposals, which seemed radical to some in 2016, have gained varying degrees of acceptance among the Democratic candidates. Most of the candidates have made proposals or taken positions on bills before Congress. Some of these proposals aim to reduce debt. Others go to the root of the problem—the high cost of going to college. Here are fixes candidates have proposed:

Free College

Sanders’ 2017 College for All Act would make public colleges and universities tuition-free by subsidizing two-thirds of college tuition, with the states providing the remaining third. Under the Act, students from families making less than $125,000 per year would qualify for free tuition. The funding would also require schools to meet some conditions, such as reducing their reliance on low-paid adjunct faculty. The colleges would not be able to use the money to raise administration salaries or build new stadiums.

Rival candidates Senators Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Kamala Harris have co-sponsored the bill. The program would be paid for by imposing a tax on stock market transactions.

Elizabeth Warren’s plan goes further. In addition to eliminating tuition and fees for public colleges, her plan would:

Increase the size and flexibility of Pell Grants so that low-income students would be able to pay for room-and-board and books. (Non-tuition expenses account for 61 percent of students’ cost of going to public 4-year colleges, and an even higher percent for 2-year colleges.)

Increase funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

Provide additional funds to states that have successfully improved graduation rates for students of color and low-income students.

Senator Warren’s plan would be paid for by a tax on the very wealthiest families in America.

The other Democratic contenders have announced positions for or against free tuition, or offered some minor changes. Senators Cory Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand have offered alternatives. Gillibrand’s idea is to provide students with up to two years of free tuition for each year of pre-college community service. Booker’s plan would create a “baby bond” fund at birth, which would be used later for college (or to make a down payment on a house).

Zero Debt

The other set of proposals focus on reducing debt rather than reducing the cost of college.

Virtually all of the Democratic contenders agree that there are aspects of the current rules that are flat out unfair. For example, unlike home mortgage loans or car loans, student loans cannot be refinanced to obtain a lower rate of interest. So if loan rates decline, college borrowers cannot take advantage of the lower rates. This can amount to thousands of dollars potentially saved over the course of the loan. Another unique disadvantage to student borrowers concerns bankruptcy. Bankruptcy, as in the game of Monopoly, is available to borrowers who get over their heads in debt. A judge has the power to “discharge” some or all of a person’s debts, in order to give them a new start. But in 1998, Congress passed a law making it nearly impossible for student loans to be counted in bankruptcy proceedings.

Though the candidates agree on some of the basic fixes for student debt, each has contributed a few variations on the theme:

Senator Brian Schatz (not a candidate for president) has authored a comprehensive bill on student debt called the Debt-Free College Act. Schatz’s plan would cover all college costs—not just tuition—that exceed the “expected family contribution” on a student’s federal financial aid application. The federal government would match states’ funding for the program. Schatz’s bill is co-sponsored by candidates, Gillibrand, Harris, Booker and Warren.

Elizabeth Warren’s plan includes a graduated debt-forgiveness program that would get smaller for higher income students. She would also make the forgiven loans non-taxable.

Bernie Sanders’ College for All Act would reduce (and set a maximum for) college loan rates.

Congressman John Delaney would forgive loans for students who move to a rural area for ten years.

Congressman Eric Swalwell proposes no-interest federal loans.

John Yang proposes new funding for colleges conditioned on certain cost-saving measures.

Senator Gillibrand introduced a bill that would expand the current federal program that forgives debt when a student performs public service. Candidates Warren, Sanders, Harris, Klobuchar, and Booker have all endorsed the bill.

The high cost of college and high levels of debt obviously impact each student’s choices, career, and life. But the college debt crisis also impacts the society and the economy as a whole. If families cannot afford to send their children to college, entire categories of high-paying jobs are closed to those students and likely the children’s children as well—hampering a primary avenue for upward mobility.

Students of color are disproportionately affected. Because of our nation’s long history of racism, including housing discrimination and wage inequality, white households have nearly 6.5 times the wealth of black households, on average. This makes it extra hard for many Black families to cover the rising cost of college. As we saw in the recent college admissions scandal, very often wealth, or the lack of wealth, determines who gets a quality education. A wide range of structural barriers to mobility perpetuate the race and class inequalities that plague our country. (Despite all this, the percentage of American college students who are Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Black has been increasing.)

When students are prevented from advancing their education, we all lose the advantage of having those engineers, musicians, leaders, and teachers reaching their full potential.

Completely aside from any issue of fairness is the lag on the economy that goes along with the enormous student debt. The $1.5 trillion dollars that students owe would otherwise be spent on goods and services that stimulate the economy and create jobs. The 2020 election may determine whether students and the overall economy get a break.

For Discussion

Was the information in the reading familiar to you? What questions do you have about it?

What information surprised you or struck you the most? Why?

Do you think the proposals the candidates are offering might help you and your family? Why or why not?

Of the many proposals for solving the debt problem, which ideas do you like best? Why?

Senator Kamala Harris would like to gradually remove all federal assistance to for-profit colleges. Do you think that’s a good idea? Why or why not?

Bernie Sanders thinks that the federal government shouldn’t be making a profit from the interest on student loans. Do you agree or disagree? Why?

If colleges were free, do you think more students attend? Is that a good thing? Why or why not?

Since so many jobs require post-high school education, should we adopt k-16 education as a new normal?

Closing

Ask students to share one thing that they will take away from the discussion today.

Extension Activity: Essay

Ask students to write a brief essay arguing for a specific policy they would like to see that would address the college debt crisis.

Related Lessons

What do we do about the high cost of college and rocketing student debt? This brief Teachable Instant activity explores the 2016 presidential candidates' positions, encourages critical thinking on the numbers, and invites student research.

In three readings and discussion, students examine President Obama's proposal for free community college, weigh arguments for and against it, learn about the historical significance of community colleges, and consider the question, "Should all higher education be free?"